Title: Community Assembly Rules
1Community Assembly Rules
2Outline
- Defining assembly rules
- The niche concept
- Types of assembly rules
- Obstacles to testing assembly rules
- So what?
3Outline
- Defining assembly rules
- The niche concept
- Types of assembly rules
- Obstacles to testing assembly rules
- So what?
4Defining assembly rules
Ecological restrictions on the observed patterns
of species presence or abundance that are based
on the presence or abundance of one or more other
species or groups of species (not simply the
response of individual species to the
environment). Wilson Gitay 1995
5Defining assembly rules
Zobel 1997
How communities are assembled out of pools after
passing through abiotic environmental filters.
6Outline
- Defining assembly rules
- The niche concept
- Types of assembly rules
- Obstacles to testing assembly rules
- So what?
7The niche concept
No concept in ecology has been more variously
defined or more universally confused than the
niche. Real Levin 1991
8The niche concept
- No concept in ecology has been more variously
defined or more universally confused than the
niche. - Real Levin 1991
- Origins of niche theory
- -Grinnell 1917 (habitat)
- -Elton 1927 (biological function)
- -Gause 1934 (competitive exclusion)
- -Hutchinson 1957 (fundamental and realized)
9The niche concept
- No concept in ecology has been more variously
defined or more universally confused than the
niche. - Real Levin 1991
- Origins of niche theory
- One definition
- A species fundamental niche is defined by the
combination of conditions and resources which
allow the species to maintain a viable
population. Its realized niche is defined by the
conditions and resources utilized by the species
in the presence of (negative) interspecific
interactions.
10The niche concept
- No concept in ecology has been more variously
defined or more universally confused than the
niche. - Real Levin 1991
- Origins of niche theory
- One definition
- Niche theory and community assembly
- -Limiting similarity
11Limiting similarity There is a limit to the
similarity (and hence to the number) of competing
species which can coexist. MacArthur and Levins
1967
Limiting similarity
esource gradient
MacArthur and Levins 1967
12Outline
- Defining assembly rules
- The niche concept
- Types of assembly rules
- Obstacles to testing assembly rules
- So what?
13Types of assembly rules
- Rules based on particular species
- Diamond 1975
- Connor and Simberloff 1979 (reply)
After Wilson 1999
14Types of assembly rules
- Rules based on particular species
- Rules based on presence/absence
- -variance in richness
- -local vs. regional richness
- Cornell and Lawton 1992
- -large-scale distributions
After Wilson 1999
15Types of assembly rules
- Rules based on particular species
- Rules based on presence/absence
- Rules based on species characters
- -texture convergence
- Watkins and Wilson 2003
- -limiting similarity
- Watkins and Wilson 1992, Kelt and Brown 1999
- -guild/functional group based
- Fox and Brown 1993, Wilson and Roxburgh 1994, Fox
1999
After Wilson 1999
16Types of assembly rules
- Rules based on particular species
- Rules based on presence/absence
- Rules based on species characters
- -intrinsic guilds
- Wilson and Roxburgh 1994, Cody 1999
After Wilson 1999
17Types of assembly rules
- Rules based on particular species
- Rules based on presence/absence
- Rules based on species characters
- Rules based on species abundance
- -biomass constancy
- -abundance-based guild proportionality
- -Relative Abundance Distributions (RAD)
After Wilson 1999
18Outline
- Defining assembly rules
- The niche concept
- Types of assembly rules
- Obstacles to testing assembly rules
- So what?
19Obstacles to testing assembly rules
- Appropriate null models
- Narcissus effect-Type II error
- I.e. sampling from a post-competition pool
underestimates the role of competition, since its
effect is already reflected in the pool.
Colwell and Winkler 1984 - Jack Horner effect-Type I error
- I.e. demonstration of the obvious e.g. some
sites are richer than others, some species have
larger ranges than others, from failure to
build into the null model features one does not
want to be told about. Wilson 1995
20Obstacles to testing assembly rules
- Appropriate null models
- Environmental heterogeneity (different spp. in
different environments) - Spatial autocorrelation (non-independence)
21Outline
- Defining assembly rules
- The niche concept
- Types of assembly rules
- Obstacles to testing assembly rules
- So what?
22So what?
- Invasibility
- Community dis-assembly
- Does limiting similarity exist?
- Do local processes constrain richness?
23Do assembly rules exist? How important are they?
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26Why are more diverse communities more resistant
to invasion? More diverse
communities should have less space available
native species abundance
total unoccupied space
.
1 - Species system
2 - Species system
Percent cover
3 - Species system
Time
Time